Page:What Are Conspiracy Theories? A Definitional Approach to Their Correlates, Consequences, and Communication.pdf/27

This page has been proofread, but needs to be validated.
  • Swami V, Coles R. 2010. The truth is out there: belief in conspiracy theories. Psychologist 23(7):560–63
  • Swami V, Coles R, Stieger S, Pietschnig J, Furnham A, et al. 2011. Conspiracist ideation in Britain and Austria: evidence of a monological belief system and associations between individual psychological differences and real-world and fictitious conspiracy theories. Br. J. Psychol. 102(3):443–63
  • Swami V, Furnham A, Smyth N, Weis L, Lay A, et al. 2016. Putting the stress on conspiracy theories: examining associations between psychological stress, anxiety, and belief in conspiracy theories. Pers. Individ. Differ. 99:72–76
  • Swami V, Voracek M, Stieger S, Tran US, Furnham A. 2014. Analytic thinking reduces belief in conspiracy theories. Cognition 133(3):572–85
  • Tetlock PE. 2002. Social functionalist frameworks for judgment and choice: intuitive politicians, theologians, and prosecutors. Psychol. Rev. 109(3):451–71
  • Thorburn S, Bogart LM. 2005. Conspiracy beliefs about birth control: barriers to pregnancy prevention among African Americans of reproductive age. Health Educ. Behav. 32(4):474–87
  • Uscinski JE. 2018. The study of conspiracy theories. Argumenta 3(2):233–45
  • Uscinski JE, Douglas K, Lewandowsky S. 2017. Climate change conspiracy theories. In Oxford Research Encyclopedia of Climate Science. Oxford, UK: Oxford Univ. Press
  • Uscinski JE, Parent JM. 2014. American Conspiracy Theories. Oxford, UK: Oxford Univ. Press
  • van der Linden S. 2015. The conspiracy-effect: exposure to conspiracy theories (about global warming) decreases pro-social behavior and science acceptance. Pers. Individ. Differ. 87:171–73
  • van der Linden S, Panagopoulos C, Azevedo F, Jost JT. 2021. The paranoid style in American politics revisited: an ideological asymmetry in conspiratorial thinking. Political Psychol. 42(1):23–51
  • van der Wal RC, Sutton RM, Lange J, Braga JPN. 2018. Suspicious binds: conspiracy thinking and tenuous perceptions of causal connections between co-occurring and spuriously correlated events. Eur. J. Soc. Psychol. 48(7):970–89
  • van Mulukom V, Pummerer LJ, Alper S, Bai H, Čavojová V, et al. 2022. Antecedents and consequences of COVID-19 conspiracy beliefs: a systematic review. Soc. Sci. Med. 301:114912
  • van Prooijen J-W, Acker M. 2015. The influence of control on belief in conspiracy theories: conceptual and applied extensions: control and conspiracy belief. Appl. Cogn. Psychol. 29(5):753–61
  • van Prooijen J-W, Douglas KM. 2017. Conspiracy theories as part of history: the role of societal crisis situations. Mem. Stud. 10(3):323–33
  • van Prooijen J-W, Douglas KM, De Inocencio C. 2018. Connecting the dots: Illusory pattern perception predicts belief in conspiracies and the supernatural. Eur. J. Soc. Psychol. 48(3):320–35
  • van Prooijen J-W, Jostmann NB. 2013. Belief in conspiracy theories: the influence of uncertainty and perceived morality. Eur. J. Soc. Psychol. 43(1):109–15
  • van Prooijen J-W, van Vugt M. 2018. Conspiracy theories: evolved functions and psychological mechanisms. Perspect. Psychol. Sci. 13(6):770–88
  • Wagner-Egger P, Bangerter A. 2007. The truth lies elsewhere: correlates of belief in conspiracy theories. Rev. Int. Psychol. Soc. 20(4):31–61
  • Wagner-Egger P, Delouvée S, Gauvrit N, Dieguez S. 2018. Creationism and conspiracism share a common teleological bias. Curr. Biol. 28(16):R867–68
  • Wang C, Liu Z, Chen Z, Xu M, He T, Zhang Z. 2020. The establishment of reference sequence for SARS-CoV-2 and variation analysis. J. Med. Virol. 92(6):667–74
  • Whitson JA, Galinsky AD. 2008. Lacking control increases illusory pattern perception. Science 322(5898):115–17
  • Wilson MS, Rose C. 2014. The role of paranoia in a dual-process motivational model of conspiracy beliefs. In Power, Politics, and Paranoia: Why People Are Suspicious of Their Leaders, ed. J-W Prooijen, PAM van Lange, pp. 273–91. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge Univ. Press
  • Wood C, Finlay WML. 2008. British National Party representations of Muslims in the month after the London bombings: homogeneity, threat, and the conspiracy tradition. Br. J. Soc. Psychol. 47(4):707–26
  • Wood MJ. 2016. Some dare call it conspiracy: Labeling something a conspiracy does not reduce belief in it. Political Psychol. 37(5):695–705
  • Wood MJ, Douglas KM. 2013. “What about building 7?”: a social psychological study of online discussion of 9/11 conspiracy theories. Front. Psychol. 4:409
www.annualreviews.org • Conspiracy Theories297